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Showing posts with label planes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label planes. Show all posts

Aug 30, 2012

Virgin Airlines to give top customer free trip into space

virgin galactic

Frequent flyer with Virgin Airlines? If so, you could find yourself flying into space next year.

If you happen to spend much of your time flying around on Virgin passenger planes, you’re in with a chance of winning a free trip into space.

The person who flies the most miles with Virgin America, Virgin Atlantic and Virgin Australia between now and August 7 next year will bag a seat on a suborbital space flight on the company’s Virgin Galactic SpaceShipTwo aircraft.

Second prize gets you a place on a zero-gravity flight, giving you the chance to experience true weightlessness high above the planet.

Virgin Airlines says it’ll count the total number of miles accumulated, regardless of whether or not you use the miles before the closing date.

To enter, you need to sign up. Full details about the competition can be found on Virgin’s Mission Galactic page here. To have any chance of winning, you’ll obviously need to be a really, really frequent flyer with Virgin, but hey, you never know.

A regular ticket for a flight on SpaceShipTwo, which is expected to make its maiden flight some time next year, costs a hefty $200,000 (£128,000). Five hundred extremely wealthy individuals have already signed up for a seat on the aircraft.

Last month Virgin boss Richard Branson, the billionaire entrepreneur behind the company’s space project, announced that SpaceShipTwo’s maiden flight will be a family affair, with his children Holly and Sam planning to join him when it takes off from a specially built spaceport in New Mexico.

Virgin’s space-bound aircraft can carry two pilots and six passengers, and will make its journey to space on the back of the WhiteKnightTwo launch aircraft. Once they reach a height of 15,000 meters (50,000 feet), the two aircraft will separate before SpaceShipTwo blasts into space.

Space tourism is becoming big business, with several companies around the world competing to establish themselves in the market.

[via Mashable]


Source : digitaltrends[dot]com

Aug 27, 2012

US flight regulator to look again at in-flight use of electronics, may relax rules

The Federal Aviation Administration is planning to take a closer look at the use of electronics on passenger planes in a move that could ultimately see rules relaxed.

If you’ve ever flown, you’ll be more than a little familiar with the take-off and landing procedures, which include switching off all personal electronic devices (PEDs), a source of frustration among many nervous flyers who would rather listen to some calming tunes on their music player than the roar of the engines as they hurtle down the runway in an aluminum tube laden with highly inflammable fuel.

Likewise, taking a few photos of the landscape below with your digital camera as you come in to land will, if you get spotted, result in a few stern words from a member of the cabin crew.

Interference?

Can it really be the case that all PEDs have inner workings that, if switched on, are going to bring the plane down? Despite people discreetly using their iPods or e-readers during take-offs and landings, has there ever been a report of an aviation accident caused by a PED? Aren’t airplane crashes usually the result of pilot error or catastrophic mechanical failure rather than Mr. Smith in seat 43A using his music player?

With a Reuters report on Monday about Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) plans to take a closer look at the use of PEDs on flights, perhaps things are about to change for the better for passengers with a bag of gadgets under the seat.

Study group

The report says that starting in the fall, a new study group will examine the procedures airlines use to discover whether a gadget or gizmo can be safely used during a flight, or parts of a flight. However, the group will not be considering whether to allow passengers to make calls using mobile phones.

As things currently stand, airlines have to show that a device doesn’t cause potentially dangerous radio interference before they can be given the green light for use during a flight.

Acting FAA Administrator Michael Huerta said of the plans: “We’re looking for information to help air carriers and operators decide if they can allow more widespread use of electronic devices in today’s aircraft,” adding, “We also want solid safety data to make sure tomorrow’s aircraft designs are protected from interference.”

Speaking to Forbes about the FAA’s plans, Steve Lott, a spokesperson for industry trade group Airlines for America, said: “The safety of our passengers and crews remains our top priority and our members will work cooperatively with the FAA on opportunities to evaluate personal electronic devices to ensure customers can use these products safely during flight.”

Troublesome passengers

Though there have been reports of pilots suspecting PEDs as the cause of some mysterious happenings on the flight deck, no link has ever been proved.

Indeed, the biggest PED-related problem appears not to be interference with an aircraft’s flying instruments, but stubborn passengers who cause trouble by refusing to switch off their device – remember the incident late last year when actor Alec Baldwin was kicked off a plane for refusing to turn off his phone during what must have been a particularly exciting game of Words With Friends?

With more and more people dumping paper books in favor of e-readers, and with other PEDs gaining in popularity, it would be great if the airlines discovered that actually many of these devices are safe to use during any part of the flight. We await the study groups’s decision….

[Image: Dimitriy Shironosov / Shutterstock]


Source : digitaltrends[dot]com

Aug 7, 2012

138 Synchronized skydivers shatter vertical formation world record [Video]

Friday marked the day a new world record was born as 138 skydivers jumped off six different planes to form the largest vertical formation.

Cats and dogs never actually fall out of the sky, so why do people still use such a strange expression when commenting on heavy rain? Probably because it won’t have as good a ring to say it’s raining boys and girls, even if 138 of them just simultaneously came down from the sky as part of the world’s newest record for most skydivers in a vertical formation.

Jumping from six planes over Ottawa, Ill. — a town approximately 80 miles outside of Chicago, the 138 skydivers beat the previous world record of 108 people. Despite the 2-minute duration of the actual stunt, it took 15 attempts over the span of three days before the skydivers were able to perfectly join hands for a snow flake formation. Divers also faced speeds of up to 220 mph and had to perform acrobatic moves on par with ”doing a handstand at 7,000 feet,” as Rook Nelson, an organizer and the owner of Skydive Chicago, described to TIME.

In the video, you can see the divers jumping off the plane and seemingly maneuvering their way in the air to reach the main group. Then, you quickly realize the skydivers were performing this upside down until everyone was able to come together. The result is a colorful snow flake shape that lasts for only a few seconds before team members broke off separate ways to release their parachutes. Later that Friday evening, three judges from the Federation Aeronautique Internationale confirmed the stunt as the new world record. Almost as crazy as the recent record for a skydiver who landed with no parachute!

The skydiver team was also quite diverse, with 13 women selected for the world record breaking stunt and other team members hailing from France, Spain, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, Ukraine, Russia, Italy, Belgium, Australia, and Great Britain to take part. So perhaps raining cats and dogs doesn’t make sense in this scenario, but it sure is raining men.

Watch the video below to see the actual dive and prepare to be mesmerized.


Source : digitaltrends[dot]com